front 1 1. Where are the base and the apex of the heart? | back 1 Apex of the heart
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front 2 2. Which “end” of the heart has vessels attached to it? | back 2 The base of the heart is the superior end where the major vessels are attached. |
front 3 What is the pericardial sac? What type of tissue makes up the sac? | back 3 pericardial sac—>stabilizes the heart and associated vessels within the mediastinum
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front 4 4. Describe the Parietal and Visceral Pericardia. Location, purpose, composition | back 4 Visceral pericardia- Layer of serous membrane adjacent to the heart tissue.
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front 5 5. What is pericarditis and what types of problems does it cause? | back 5 Pericarditis- Inflammation of the pericardium. Trama. Infection. Post-sergical. Increase in serous fluid. Blood. Increase pressure around heart. Interferse with beating. |
front 6 6. What is cardiac tamponade and what problems does it cause? | back 6 Cardiac tamponade is a clinical syndrome caused by the accumulation of fluid in the pericardial space, resulting in reduced ventricular filling and subsequent hemodynamic compromise. The condition is a medical emergency, the complications of which include pulmonary edema, shock, and death. |
front 7 7. Name and describe the three layers of the heart. Include the type of tissue each is made of and any unique or important features. | back 7 Epicardium, Myocardium, Endocardium
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front 8 8. What is the cardiac skeleton made of and what are its functions? | back 8 The cardiac skeleton, sometimes called the fibrous skeleton of the heart, is the structure of dense connective tissue in the heart that separates the atria from the ventricles.
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front 9 9. Describe the atria - include location, size, vessels attached to each one. | back 9 Atria- Superior chambers, known as the "receiving chambers", receive blood from the great veins
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front 10 10. Define: Interatrial septum, fossa ovalis, foramen ovale, coronary sulcus | back 10 Fossa ovalis- Indentation after foramen ovale closes.
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front 11 11. Describe the ventricles - include location, size, and the vessels each pumps into | back 11 - Lower chamber
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front 12 12. Define/describe these structural terms:
| back 12 interventricle septum- The wall between the ventricles of the heart.
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front 13 13. What structures are found in the sulci? | back 13 Coronary blood vessels and adipose tissue. |
front 14 14. What is endocarditis and what types of problems are associated with it? | back 14 Endocarditis is an infection of the heart's valves or its inner lining (endocardium). It is most common in people who have a damaged, diseased, or artificial heart valve.
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front 15 15. What structure does the coronary circulation serve? | back 15 Blood supply to hearts own tissues. |
front 16 16. What are the main structures of the coronary circulation? | back 16 The coronary circulation consists of the coronary arteries, which branch off of the aorta and carry oxygen-rich blood to the heart muscle; and coronary veins, which carry deoxygenated blood to the coronary sinus, which empties into the right atrium. |
front 17 17. Where do the coronary arteries get their blood (which vessel feeds them)? | back 17 Coronary arteries get their blood from an expensive network of coronary blood vessels. |
front 18 18. What structure does the blood drain before returning to the right atrium? | back 18 The anterior cardiac veins drain the anterior surface of the R ventricle and empty directly into the R atrium. |
front 19 19. Define, Compare and contrast pulmonary and systemic circulation. | back 19 Pulmonary: Pumps blood through lungs, get O2 and removes CO2
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front 20 20. Trace a drop of blood passing through the heart from the vena cava to the aorta.
| back 20 Vena Cavas- R Atrium- Tricuspid Valve- R ventricle- Pulmonary semilunar valve- Pulmonary trunk- Pulmonary arteries-Lungs-Pulmonary Veins....
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front 21 21. List and describe the fetal circulatory shortcut.
| back 21 The foramen ovale is a hole in the Interatrial Septum, allowing the blood skips from right atrium to left atrium
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front 22 23. Describe the heart valves - what they’re made of, which have chordae tendineae. | back 22 They are strong, flexible and stress resistant. Covered by endocardium and made of dense irregular connective tissue. Only the atrioventicular valves have chordae tendineae. |
front 23 24. What is the major function of the heart valves and why is it important? | back 23 The major function of the valves is to regulate the flow of blood and prevent the backflow of blood. It is important because id the valves can’t maintain adequate circulation, it can lead to Valvular Heart Disease, resulting in carditis (inflammation of the heart) and rheumatic fever. |
front 24 25. Where are each of the valves located? | back 24 Atrioventicular: Between the atria and ventricles. Tricuspid valve is in the right ventricle and Bicuspid valve in the left ventricle.
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front 25 26. What do the chordae tendineae and papillary muscles do? Why is this important? | back 25 The chordae tendineae and papillary muscles anchor the heart valves in place. |
front 26 27. What is a heart murmur? | back 26 Heart murmurs are abnormal heart sounds that can be caused by stenosis, prolapsed valves or an open foramen ovale. |
front 27 28. What is stenosis of a heart valve? What is a valve prolapse? What problems does each cause? | back 27 Stenosis is narrowing of the valves and it makes it harder to eject blood. It can occur at any valve in the heart. Valve prolapse is when the vales go past the closed position which leads to backflow of blood. |
front 28 29. Describe the contractile fibers of the heart in terms of both basic structure and function. | back 28 They are specialized muscle cells of the conducting system control and coordinate the heartbeat. It generates pressure and moves blood. |
front 29 30. What are the electrical phases for an action potential in the heart muscle? | back 29 Permeability changes due to voltage-gated
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front 30 31. Describe each of these electrical phases for an action potential and what happens during them. | back 30 no data |
front 31 32. How does the refractory period for cardiac muscle compare to that of skeletal muscle and why is this important to heart function? | back 31 * Skeletal muscle: Rapid AP & Rapid contraction.
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front 32 33. What type of tissue makes up the conducting system of the heart and what is its purpose? | back 32 Contraction of the atria and ventricles is coordinated by specialized cardiac muscle cells in the wall of the heart that form the conduction system of the heart. |
front 33 34. Diagram and explain the electrical conduction system. Include the location and a description of the roles of the sino-atrial node, atrioventricular node, Bundle of His, bundle branches, Purkinje or conducting fibers.
| back 33 1) SA node- just below the Superior Vena Cava. It is the pacemaker and gets input from the Sympathetic and Parasympathetic nerves
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front 34 35. What is an ECG/EKG and what can it tell us about the heart? What are the ECG leads? | back 34 Diagnostic of heart. A 360 picture of electrical events of the heart.
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front 35 36. Describe what happens during the:
| back 35 P wave = Trigger atrial contraction . Atrial depolarization.
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front 36 37. Define systole and diastole. | back 36 Systole-
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front 37 38. Why are atrial and ventricular systole and diastole separate events? | back 37 Need separate events in order to allow time for chambers to fill and to maintain pressure. To move blood. |
front 38 39. What is the cardiac cycle? | back 38 The period between the start of one heartbeat and the beginning of the next. |
front 39 . Name the phases of the cycle and describe what is happening during each phase. | back 39 Atrial Systole-
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front 40 Define: Contractility | back 40 Contractility- Amount of force produced during a contraction, at a given preload. Based on how much (ca+2) is available
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front 41 Define: End Systolic Volume,
| back 41 End Systolic volume- amount of blood left in the ventricles at the end of systole (ml). After contraction.
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front 42 * Define Isovolumetric Contraction | back 42 Isovolumetric Contraction- Heart valves closed , volumes of ventricals change, increase in pressure |
front 43 41. Define: Ventricular ejection | back 43 Ventricular ejection- Pressure in ventrical exceeds that – muscle cells of atrial trunk, sl valves open, tention production remain constant. |
front 44 42. How do we determine stroke volume for someone? | back 44 End diatoilic volume – end systolic volume= sv
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front 45 43. What are the 4 normal heart sounds and what causes each one? | back 45 S1- Tri/bicuspid
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front 46 44. ???What is the stroke volume formula and what does it mean? | back 46 The amount of blood ejected from each ventrical during a contraction. |
front 47 45. What is cardiac output? 46. Be able to use the CO = SV x HR formula if given data! | back 47 The amount of blood pumped by the left ventricle in 1 min. HR X SV => CO |
front 48 47. What is cardiac reserve and why is it important? | back 48 The period between the start of one heartbeat and the beginning of the next. |
front 49 48. What are the three major factors that influence stroke volume? | back 49 Preload – Contractility – Afterload |
front 50 49. Describe each factor of stroke volume and explain its influence on the stroke volume. | back 50 -PRELOAD: based on EDV= Increase EDV => increase preload
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front 51 50. What are some things that influence each of these stroke volume factors? | back 51 Blood loss, blocked blood flow, an increase or decrease in both Bp
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front 52 51. How does the autonomic nervous system influence heart rate?
| back 52 Through sympathetic and parasympathetic: ANS helps heart
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front 53 52. Define Tachycardia and Bradycardia | back 53 Tachycarida – Heart rate above 100 beats/ min
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front 54 53. What hormones influence the heart rate and ability to contract? | back 54 Epi and Ne; T3 and T4; Glucagon |
front 55 54. What are some of the other factors that influence your heart rate?
| back 55 Baroreceptors=> BP
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front 56 55. What role does exercise play in CV health? | back 56 - Increases SV
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front 57 56. Name factors that increase your risk of developing heart disease or other CV disorders? | back 57 Body size, genetics, age, gender, Fitness level, Body temperature, heart disease or damage, meds and drugs |
front 58 57. Define and describe: Arrhythmia, atrial flutter, atrial fibrillation, ventricular fibrillation. | back 58 Arrhythmia- Irregular beating patterns.
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front 59 58. Which is the most serious arrhythmia and why? | back 59 - Ventricular fibrillation V-Fib: Heart not pumping blood to the body. |
front 60 60. What does MI stand for? What does this mean? | back 60 Myocardial infarction (MI). Commonly known as Heart Attack, interruption of blood supply to a part of the heart, causing heart cells to die. This is most commonly due to occlusion (blockage) of a coronary artery. |
front 61 Define: Angina | back 61 Angina: is chest pain or discomfort you get when your heart muscle does not get enough blood. |
front 62 Define Angioplasty | back 62 Angioplasty: is a procedure to restore blood flow through the artery. |
front 63 59. Define: By-pass surgery | back 63 By-pass surgery: a blood vessel is removed or redirected from one area of the body and placed around the area of narrowing to "bypass" the blockages and restore blood flow to the heart muscle. |
front 64 61. What is ischemia and why is it a problem? | back 64 An inadequate blood supply to an organ or part of the body, especially the heart muscles. Since oxygen is carried to tissues in the blood, insufficient blood supply causes tissue to become starved of oxygen. In the highly aerobic tissues of the heart and brain, irreversible damage to tissues can occur in as little as 3–4 minutes at body temperature. The kidneys are also quickly damaged by loss of blood flow. |
front 65 1. Describe the three layers of tissue found in artery and vein walls. | back 65 Externa, Media and Interna. |
front 66 2. How are the layers of tissues found in artery and vain walls similar and how are they different?
| back 66 Externa: FB connective tissue
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front 67 3. What are some of the major characteristics of arteries? | back 67 no data |
front 68 4. What are the three categories of arteries – how are they alike and how do they differ? | back 68 Arteries don't have valves while veins have valves and the blood flows slower,smoother and at low pressure in veins than in arteries. All arteries except pulmonary artery carry oxygenated blood while all veins except pulmonary vein carry deoxygenated blood. Arteries carry blood away from the heart to the rest of the body while veins carry blood to the heart away from the rest of the body. |
front 69 Define: Coronary artery disease | back 69 Blockage in arteries that feed the heart- often few symptoms in early stages. |
front 70 Define: Aneurysm | back 70 An aneurysm is an abnormal widening or ballooning of a portion of an artery due to weakness in the wall of the blood vessel.
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front 71 5. Define: arteriosclerosis | back 71 Hardening of the arteries, also called atherosclerosis, is a common disorder. It occurs when fat, cholesterol, and other substances build up in the walls of arteries and form hard structures called plaques. |
front 72 6. Name and describe the different varieties of arteriosclerosis and list some contributing factors to their development. | back 72 Over time, these plaques can block the arteries and cause problems throughout the body.
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front 73 7. Describe the structure of a capillary wall.
| back 73 Microscopic
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front 74 8. What is a pre-capillary sphincter and what does it do? | back 74 The precapillary sphincter is a band of smooth muscle that adjusts the blood flow into each capillary. At the point where each true capillary originates from an arteriole, a smooth muscle fiber usually encircles the capillary. This is called the precapillary sphincter. This sphincter can open and close the entrance to the capillary. Blood flow in a capillary changes as vasomotion occurs |
front 75 9. Define the terms: arterial anastomosis, sinusoid and venous sinus | back 75 Arterial anastomosis: is a connection (an anastomosis) between two blood vessels, such as between arteries (arterio-arterial anastomosis), between veins (veno-venous anastomosis) or between an artery and a vein (arterio-venous anastomosis). Such anastomoses occur normally in the body in the circulatory system, serving as backup routes for blood to flow if one link is blocked or otherwise compromised, but may also occur pathologically.
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front 76 10. Describe the structure and function of the veins and venules. | back 76 Veins are blood vessels which carry deoxygenated (or very low levels of oxygen) blood back to the heart. The exception to this rule is the pulmonary vein, which carries oxygenated blood, from the lungs, back to the heart, ready to be pumped around the rest of the body.
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front 77 11. Why do some of the larger veins have valves in them? | back 77 Larger Veins have valves because venous pressure is often not great enough (as the blood must overcome gravity and other forces) to return the blood to the heart. To prevent the back flow to the heart then It might cause Heart attack. Usually Larger veins have higher pressure and without back flow it could cause us heart attack. |
front 78 12. Define the terms varicose veins and hemorrhoids. | back 78 Varicose veins: Varicose veins are swollen, twisted, and sometimes painful veins that have filled with an abnormal collection of blood. Symptoms: Fullness, heaviness, aching, and sometimes pain in the legs; Visible, swollen veins
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front 79 13. What is the pattern of distribution of blood in the different vessels? | back 79 Pulmonary Circuit (10-20%)
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front 80 14. What do we mean by venous reserve? | back 80 Ability to shift blood from systemic veins to other parts of circulatory pathway when needed. |
front 81 15. What does the term hemodynamics mean and why is it important? | back 81 Hemodynamics means movement of blood.
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front 82 Define: blood pressure | back 82 Force against walls of systemic arteries. Measured in mmHg.Arterial pressure. |
front 83 Define: resistance (R) | back 83 The force opposing blood flow. |
front 84 Define: Stroke volume | back 84 Stroke volume: stroke volume (SV) is the volume of blood pumped from one ventricle of the heart with each beat |
front 85 16. Define : heart rate | back 85 Heart rate: is the number of heartbeats per unit of time, typically expressed as beats per minute (bpm) |
front 86 17. Cardiac Output is influenced by stroke volume, heart rate, blood pressure and resistance.
| back 86 Cardiac output (Q or CO ) is the volume of blood being pumped by the heart, in particular by a left or right ventricle in the time interval of one minute. Q is furthermore the combined sum of output from the right ventricle and the output from the left ventricle during the phase of systole of the heart |
front 87 20. Define, compare and contrast: Hydrostatic pressure, blood pressure, and circulatory pressure | back 87 hydrostatic pressure (hdr-sttk)-
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front 88 21. Name the 4 major factors that influence resistance to blood flow and describe each one.
| back 88 1. Blood viscosity-
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front 89 23. Which blood vessels provide the most resistance and why? | back 89 Arterioles-
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front 90 24. What units do we use when measuring blood pressure? How do we write them out? | back 90 Blood pressure is measured in millimeters of mercury (mmHg) and recorded as two numbers -- systolic pressure "over" diastolic pressure. For example, the doctor or nurse might say "130 over 80" as a blood pressure reading. This is written as 130/80. |
front 91 25. Define Systolic pressure and Diastolic pressure. | back 91 Diastolic blood pressure- the minimum level of blood pressure measured between contractions of the heart.
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front 92 26. Blood pressure when the heart is resting between beats. | back 92 Resting Heart Rate (RHR) is the rate at which your heart beats when you are at rest. The best time to measure RHR is right after you naturally wake up in the morning, without an alarm. Generally, the lower a person's RHR is, the more fit that person is because the heart doesn't have to work as hard. The heart usually beats between 60-80 times per minute while at rest. |
front 93 27. How do we determine pulse pressure (formula)? What is pulse pressure? | back 93 Systolic Pressure (mmHg)
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front 94 28. How do we determine Mean Arterial Pressure (formula)? | back 94 It is calculated by adding one-third of the pulse pressure to the diastolic pressure. |
front 95 29. Why is mean arterial pressure clinically important? | back 95 Because when pressures shift outside the normal range, clinical problems can develop. |
front 96 30. What is hypertension and why is it clinically important?
| back 96 Hypertension is abnormally high blood pressure and it is clinically important because it increases the workload on the heart, enlarging the left ventricle, resulting in multiple problems.
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front 97 33. Distinguish between primary hypertension and secondary hypertension. | back 97 Primary: For most adults, there's no identifiable cause of high blood pressure. This type of high blood pressure, called essential hypertension or primary hypertension, tends to develop gradually over many years.
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front 98 34. What is hypotension and why is clinically important?
| back 98 Hypotension is abnormally low blood pressure. Important because systems may not get enough O2 or nutrients delivered to tissues and is usually associated with high volume blood loss. |
front 99 35. What is orthostatic hypotension? | back 99 Orthostatic hypotension is a form of hypotension in which a person's blood pressure suddenly falls when standing up or stretching. The symptom is caused by blood pooling in the lower extremities upon a change in body position. Also known as a head rush or a dizzy spell. |
front 100 36. What is capillary exchange?
| back 100 Exchange of nutrients, gases, waters, ions, etc.
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front 101 38. Compare and contrast filtration and reabsorption. Why is each important? | back 101 Filtration- out of blood
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front 102 39. How does material that isn’t reabsorbed end up being returned to the vessels? | back 102 no data |
front 103 40. What is net filtration pressure? Why does it change from one end of a capillary bed to the other? What does this change cause? | back 103 no data |
front 104 41. Define edema and give examples of situations that might cause it. | back 104 Build up of interstitial fluid producing swelling.
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front 105 42. Define venous return. | back 105 Help us to bring blood back
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front 106 43. Explain how the skeletal muscle and respiratory pumps assist venous return. | back 106 Venous valves: Prevent backflow, minimize pooling, keep blood moving back to heart.
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front 107 44. What roll do pressure differences play in venous return? | back 107 no data |
front 108 45. What is autoregulation of blood flow? | back 108 Autoregulation is a manifestation of local blood flow regulation. It is defined as the intrinsic ability of an organ to maintain a constant blood flow despite changes in perfusion pressure. For example, if perfusion pressure is decreased to an organ (e.g., by partially occluding the arterial supply to the organ), blood flow initially falls, then returns toward normal levels over the next few minutes. This autoregulatory response occurs in the absence of neural and hormonal influences and therefore is intrinsic to the organ. When perfusion pressure (arterial minus venous pressure, PA-PV) initially decreases, blood flow (F) falls because of the following relationship between pressure, flow and resistance: |
front 109 46. What are some of the factors that influence autoregulation mechanisms? | back 109 no data |
front 110 47. What are Vasodilators? What are some of the triggers that promote their release? | back 110 Increase local circulation. Open pre-capillary sphincters.
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front 111 48. What are Vasoconstrictors? What are some of triggers that promote their release? | back 111 Decrease local circulation ->> below normal range
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front 112 49. Where is the cardiovascular control center in the brain? | back 112 Medulla Oblongata |
front 113 50. What type(s) of nerve fibers run to the heart? What does each type do? | back 113 no data |
front 114 51. What type(s) of nerve fibers run to the blood vessels? What do they do? | back 114 no data |
front 115 52. How do nerve signals effect heart rate, contractility, vessel diameter and resistance to flow? | back 115 no data |
front 116 53. . What is a baroreceptor? Where are they located? What do they do? | back 116 Baroreceptors monitor pressure changes sensitive to stretching of vessels of heart chambers.
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front 117 54. What chemicals do chemoreceptors associated with cardiovascular control monitor? | back 117 Chemoreceptors alert CNS to:
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front 118 54. Where are some of the chemoreceptors located?
| back 118 Chemoreceptors Alert CNS to change in the levels in CO2, O2 AND H+. Receptors in Medulla Oblongata. High CO2 + High H+= Acidoss Low PH
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front 119 55. Which hormones are involved with controlling the blood pressure?
| back 119 1. Epinephrine & Norepinephrine
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front 120 * Describe the following circulatory sub-systems: (Inc. structures, purpose and unique features)
| back 120 Pulmonary Circulation: Designed to oxygenate the blood 10-20% blood in circulation. |
front 121 *56. Describe the following circulatory sub-systems: (Inc. structures, purpose and unique features)
| back 121 Systemic Circulation: Carries O2 and nutrients to tissues, removes CO2 and wastes. 80-90% blood in circulation. |
front 122 56. Describe the following circulatory sub-systems: (Inc. structures, purpose and unique features)
| back 122 Hepatic Portal Circulation: Collects venous blood from the G1 tract and spleen routes through liver before returning to heart. |
front 123 56. Describe the following circulatory sub-systems: (Inc. structures, purpose and unique features)
| back 123 Cerebral Circulation:
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front 124 Action potentials generated by the autorhythmic cells spread to the contractile cells through what structures in the membrane? | back 124 gap junctions
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front 125 The pacemaker potential (unstable resting membrane potential) in the SA node (an autorhythmic cell) is due to a decreased efflux of what ion? | back 125 potassium
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front 126 When threshold is reached at the SA node (an autorhythmic cell), what channels open causing further depolarization of the membrane? | back 126 fast calcium
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front 127 Repolarization of an autorhythmic cell is due to the opening of which channels? | back 127 voltage-gated potassium channels
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front 128 In order to cause cardiac muscle contraction, the contractile cells must also depolarize. What causes the depolarization of the contractile cells? | back 128 the flow of positive ions from adjacent cells
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front 129 Which part of the conduction system initiates the depolarizing impulse, which spreads throughout the heart? | back 129 SA node
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front 130 Contraction of the atria results from which wave of depolarization on the ECG tracing? | back 130 P wave
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front 131 Which part of the intrinsic conduction system delays the impulse briefly before it moves on to the ventricles? | back 131 AV node
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front 132 What is the relaxed state of the ventricle called? | back 132 diastole
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front 133 The one-way nature of the left AV valve prevents blood flow from _________. | back 133 the left ventricle to the left atrium
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front 134 The closing of the left AV valve occurs near the beginning of __________. | back 134 ventricular systole
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front 135 The majority of ventricular filling occurs while the ventricles and atria are in what state(s)? | back 135 ventricular and atrial diastole
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front 136 The volume of the ventricle when it is most full ? | back 136 describes end-diastolic volume
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front 137 Left ventricular filling occurs __________. | back 137 while the AV valve is open
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front 138 Heart valves are in what state during isovolumetric contraction? | back 138 The AV valves and semilunar valves are closed.
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front 139 The decrease in left ventricular pressure at the end of ventricular systole causes __________. | back 139 the semilunar valve to close
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front 140 Ventricular diastole begins with the closing of the semilunar valves. What phase of the cardiac cycle happens between this event and the later opening of the AV valves? | back 140 isovolumetric relaxation
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front 141 Isovolumetric relaxation and ventricular filling (two phases of the cardiac cycle) take place during __________. | back 141 ventricular diastole
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front 142 Describe the pressures in the atria and ventricles that would cause the opening of the AV valves. | back 142 Pressure in the atria would be greater than the pressure in the ventricles.
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front 143 What causes the aortic semilunar valve to close? | back 143 greater pressure in the aorta than in the left ventricle
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front 144 Put the phases of the cardiac cycle in the correct order, starting after ventricular filling. | back 144 isovolumetric contraction, ventricular ejection, isovolumetric relaxation
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front 145 Increased pressure in the ventricles would close what valve(s)? | back 145 AV valves only
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front 146 Which of the following would increase cardiac output to the greatest extent? | back 146 increased heart rate and increased stroke volume
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front 147 Which of the following would increase heart rate? | back 147 epinephrine and norepinephrine
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front 148 How would an increase in the sympathetic nervous system increase stroke volume? | back 148 increased contractility
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front 149 By what mechanism would an increase in venous return increase stroke volume? | back 149 increased end diastolic volume
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front 150 How would a decrease in blood volume affect both stroke volume and cardiac output? | back 150 decreased stroke volume and no change in cardiac output
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front 151 In the capillaries, hydrostatic pressure (HP) is exerted by __________. | back 151 blood pressure
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front 152 The net hydrostatic pressure (HP) is the hydrostatic pressure in the __________ minus hydrostatic pressure in the __________. | back 152 capillary; interstitial fluid
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front 153 The colloid osmotic pressure in the capillary is caused by __________. | back 153 proteins in the blood
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front 154 Which net pressure draws fluid into the capillary? | back 154 net osmotic pressure
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front 155 Reabsorption of fluid into the capillary takes place at the arterial end or venous end of the capillary? | back 155 venous
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front 156 Arteries __________. | back 156 carry blood away from the heart |
front 157 The innermost layer of an artery or vein is called the __________. | back 157 tunica intima or tunica interna |
front 158 Fenestrated capillaries are found __________. | back 158 in the choroid plexus and kidneys |
front 159 Capillaries __________. | back 159 function as parts of a capillary plexus |
front 160 The pattern of blood flow through a capillary bed is influenced by __________. | back 160 both sympathetic innervation and parasympathetic innervation |
front 161 Chemical and gaseous exchange takes place __________. | back 161 only across capillary walls |
front 162 In general, the walls of arteries are thinner than the walls of veins. True or False? | back 162 FALSE |
front 163 Capillaries that have small pores in their endothelium are called __________. | back 163 fenestrated capillaries |
front 164 Small intestines contributes to the venous reserve True or false? __________. | back 164 False |
front 165 A new recruit in the armed forces stands at attention on a hot afternoon. He decides to lock his knees, thinking it will make the standing easier. After a short while, he faints. What has occurred? | back 165 He did not use muscular compression to help return blood to the heart; thus, his brain did not receive enough oxygenated blood, causing him to pass out. |
front 166 Arteries demonstrate a pattern of _____________, whereas veins demonstrate ________________. | back 166 divergence; convergence |
front 167 What does NOT affect the resistance found in arteries? __________. | back 167 presence of valves |
front 168 The pulse pressure of an artery is __________. | back 168 the difference between systolic and diastolic pressures |
front 169 Mean arterial pressure __________ as arterial branches become smaller. | back 169 decreases |
front 170 The process by which materials leave the capillary at the arterial end is called ______________, and the entry of materials into the capillary at the venous end is called ________________. | back 170 filtration; reabsorption |
front 171 The blood colloid osmotic pressure drives the process of __________. | back 171 reabsorption |
front 172 Pulmonary veins carry blood ____________ the heart, and this blood is _________________. | back 172 toward; oxygenated |
front 173 The three large arteries originating from the aortic arch are the __________. | back 173 brachiocephalic, left common carotid, and left subclavian arteries |
front 174 The internal carotid arteries supply blood to the __________. | back 174 brain |
front 175 The superior sagittal sinus is located in the __________ and drains blood from the __________. | back 175 falx cerebri; brain |
front 176 Blood that drains from the brain into the transverse sinus flows into the __________. | back 176 internal jugulars |
front 177 The popliteal vein is a ___________ vein that passes blood into the ______________ vein. | back 177 deep; femoral |
front 178 In which of the following locations is the pulse NOT commonly taken? | back 178 external jugular vein |
front 179 In fetal development, the connection between the right atrium and left atrium, which closes by birth, is called the __________. | back 179 foramen ovale |
front 180 What structures close or constricts at birth? | back 180 foramen ovale and ductus arteriosus |
front 181 As you proceed from the aorta toward the capillaries, blood pressure falls rapidly as the result of an increase in __________. (Use three words.) | back 181 cross-sectional area |
front 182 The driving force for filtration at the capillaries is __________. (Use two words.) | back 182 hydrostatic pressure |
front 183 Baroreceptor reflexes respond to changes in blood pressure and __________ reflexes monitor changes in the chemical composition of arterial blood. | back 183 chemoreceptor |
front 184 If a capillary is damaged, and dissolved proteins and formed elements leak into the interstitial fluid, the ICOP would be raised. This elevation of the ICOP would produce localized __________. | back 184 edema
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front 185 The pituitary hormone released in response to a decrease in blood volume and an increase in osmotic pressure is __________. | back 185 ADH- Antidiretic hormone |